You're right (annoyingly!). I was about to come back here to correct myself but you've beaten me to it. An apostrophe is used to indicate possession with nouns, but NOT with possessive pronouns (such as "its", "his") or noun plurals./Self taught for her English Higher due to illness... so really has no-one to blame but herself. Tum tee tum.
Closed AccountMar 24, 2008
They teach you that at Law school.
serialeaterMar 24, 2008
Welcome to CoS*I am not in that f**king sect...*
jennefahMar 25, 2008
You're right (annoyingly!). I was about to come back here to correct myself but you've beaten me to it. An apostrophe is used to indicate possession with nouns, but NOT with possessive pronouns (such as "its", "his") or noun plurals./Self taught for her English Higher due to illness... so really has no-one to blame but herself. Tum tee tum.
Closed AccountMar 25, 2008
Raising Arizona.
dawnraid101Mar 25, 2008
fail???
whoisjohngaultMar 25, 2008
I'm impressed with how he calmly shoved that annoying race car out of his way.
ejhdigdugMar 25, 2008
I can do without the replays, if I wanted to see it again I can rewind it.
jessejansenMar 26, 2008
Listen to THIS..!!i think you will realise How lucky U R!! :-D<a class="user" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mmkucy0Yvyg&eurl">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mmkucy0Yvyg&eurl</a>